วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 12 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Juggling T-Shirt Idea





Juggling T-Shirt Idea

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 


 
 
got new design by yourself for your team perfect!!

วันจันทร์ที่ 9 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Juggling Type Hat



Juggling Type Hat

 

no more data about hat juggling 
the frist impression of hat juggling is come from michel jackson music video,when i was young. keep that !






Breaks Juggling World Record With 11 Ball Qualify

Alex Barron Breaks Juggling World Record With 11 Ball Qualify

 


18 year old Alex Barron from the UK, first broke the world record at age 16, on August 13 2010, when he did 15 catches of 11 balls tying Bruce Sarafian’s world record from 2001. Three days later he broke that record by getting 15 catches, then just 3 days later that record was broken by Peter Bone when he caught 18 balls.

Four days after Peters record, Alex came back with a 19, then beating even that with a 21 catch just two days later.
Four days after Alex gained the new world record for 21 catches, he started to attempt a mind boggling 23 catches whilst he and Peter were making a video, which he did.


Unfortunately, Peters camera wasn’t recording and Alex’s camera got blown over by the wind, so there wasn’t any video footage to prove that the record had yet again been beaten.

Then on April 3, 2012, at the of age 18 he finally managed to break his own world record by getting a 23 ball catch.
Just watching the video boggles my mind as to how people are able to juggle that many balls at a time and catch them.


วันศุกร์ที่ 6 กรกฎาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Juggling Star Harry Levine

 
Harry Levine
 

Harry Levine moved to Olympia after graduating Clark University with a BA in music. In 1984, he founded Citizens Band which performed satirical theater and music throughout the west. He joined the Mud Bay Jugglers as a percussionist in 1988. In 1990, he began to stage manager for Mud Bay Juggler theater shows and perform part-time as a juggler. He joined the Mud Bay Jugglers as a full time performer in 1995.

 
Levine has come a long way from the Washington State orchard where he caught the juggling bug some 20 years ago, "messing around with apples" while working as a picker. Juggling became both a hobby and his "therapy." When he juggles, he says, "All other things melt away — I'm just sort of grooving." Levine turned pro in 1995, joining the Mud Bay Jugglers, an ensemble group based in Olympia, Washington. As he honed his juggling skills, Levine set his sights on performing with the Flying Karamazov Brothers. "They're silly, they're funny, they're imaginative," he says. Four years ago he auditioned for the Brothers and finished as first runner-up. "It was a real shot in the arm," says Levine. "Just to be considered a viable candidate was amazing."

 Portrait of Harry Levine, of The Flying Karamozov Brothers, with Steve Horstmann, Jeremy Perkins, and Amiel Martin juggling in the background in Layton, UT

Last year the FKB finally called and welcomed him to the family. Levine was given the stage name "Kuzma" (every name in the troupe comes from a character in Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov) and a list of routines to learn. A member of a back-up team of Brothers, he hasn't yet worked a top-tier international gig, but he frequently jets to cities around the country, recorder and kilt in tow. (The kilt is part of the FKB costume. "I'm not going to say it looks good on me," he concedes.) It's a crazy life being on call, and mastering the elaborate routines demands serious discipline: That trick with the recorder (called "4 by 4") took about 50 hours of focused practice. "It just blew my mind," he says. But despite the challenges, Levine is thrilled to be working with his heroes. "If you'd told me 20 years ago that I'd be juggling with the best, I'd have said, 'No way!' But here I am, and that's cool!"

 the Mud Bay Jugglers

When he's not juggling, Harry co-manages a non-profit arts association that presents independent film, music, and allied arts.

Harry Levine steps onto a New York City stage 


before 400 rapt onlookers. Wearing a kilt, Prince Charlie jacket, white shirt, and bowtie, he holds a small recorder to his mouth and plays the top half with his left hand, using his right to juggle three balls with another juggler — who is simultaneously singing and strumming a guitar himself. Meanwhile, another juggler is playing the bottom half of Levine's recorder. Much to Levine's relief, the crowd roars. "I didn't think I'd be able to do it," admits the new member of the renowned Flying Karamazov Brothers (FKB), a juggling company famous for tossing about frying pans and flaming torches like so many nerf balls.